U.S. Nuclear Weapons Are Controlled By 1970s Computers With 8-Inch Floppy Disks

The U.S. spends over half a trillion dollars on defense each year. In 2011, for example, the U.S. spent more (in absolute numbers) on its military than the next 13 nations combined. Currently, it has dropped to the next 7 nations combined.

The U.S. unofficially has taken the responsibility of defense for Europe through NATO. Many key nations in Europe today count on the U.S. to sail through a global conflict. This puts a huge burden on the country. With such a responsibility, observers expect the U.S. to have an up-to-date warfare technology that can aptly face its adversaries.

But a U.S. national document prepared for congress has revealed that the country’s nuclear weapons are still being controlled by an outdated technology. According to the document, the military’s nuclear arsenal is controlled by computers built in the 1970s that still use 8-inch floppy disks.

In addition, the country is spending around $60 billion each year to maintain museum-ready computers. Moreover, creators of these computers have retired, and many personnel maintaining the computers do not even know how to operate them anymore.

“We’re not even talking the more modern 3.5in floppy disk that millennials might only know as the save icon. We’re talking the OG 8in floppy, which was a large floppy square with a magnetic disk inside it. They became commercially available in 1971, but were replaced by the 5¼in floppy in 1976, and by the more familiar hard plastic 3.5in floppy in 1982”, a comment published on the Guardian said.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office has admitted that the computers operating such an important national asset are outdated. It added that parts for the computers can not be replaced as they are obsolete.

Reacting to the document, the Pentagon said it was instigating a full replacement of the outdated computers. It further said the entire upgrade of the country’s nuclear weapon systems would take longer, but the floppy disks would be replaced by the end of this year.

This revelation has made some observers to question whether the U.S. has the capability to even launch a nuclear weapon in case the need arises. The American economist and journalist, Paul Craig Roberts said the U.S. is ready for war but not prepared for it.

What do officials at the Defense Department do with the huge military spending if the country is still using such an outdated technology to operate its nuclear weapons?